Paleo Supplements by Neurobiologix

What Is Paleo?

The Paleo Diet is one founded on the principle that the healthiest diet is
similar to one our ancestors ate over 10,000 years ago. The diet is this:
eat foods found naturally in nature, stay away from processed foods,
fried foods, and other foods seen as not fit for human consumption like
dairy, legumes, and starches. Proponents of the diet proclaim a
significant increase in health, along with a lowering or complete removal
of diseases such as heart disease, obesity, gastrointestinal, inflammatory
and systemic diseases.
Along with these tenets, supplements for a Paleo Diet are also great to
incorporate into your nutritional intake.

Paleo Supplements and Vitamins

Supplementing on a Paleo Diet is still heavily encouraged, as the soil
today used to grow the crops we eat isn't as nutrient dense as the soil of a
few hundred years ago. Supplements may also assist with health issues
that can't be fixed with diet alone, and using advanced technology of the
21st century can aid in a healthy, natural lifestyle. However, even some
healthy supplements contain additives, chemicals, preservatives, or are
added either as a filler or "flow agents."
With Neurobiologix’s Paleo friendly supplements, additives and
chemicals are removed, and the basic paleo tenets are followed; keeping
foods as close to nature as possible, even in supplement form. That
means our grain-free, dairy-free, legume-free, nature-made supplements
that are lab tested and sourced from humanely raised farms.
Our supplements for the Paleo Diet keep you and your family healthy
and happy.

PEA Topical Cream

Palmitoylethanolamid (PEA) is a bio-identical fatty acid amide that is normally synthesized by healthy tissue in the human body in response to inflammation. PEA is made by various plants and animals and is present throughout the animal kingdom. PEA can be found in many different tissues including glia, neurons, retina, white blood cells, mast cells and adipocytes.

Supplementing with time released PEA has been scientlfcally shown to naturally assist in the reduction of inflammation and to have neuro-protective and possibly pain control effects. This natural anti-inflammatory supports the nervous system and abnormal immune responses.*

Palmitoylethanolamide (PEA) – backed by more than 300+ medical studies, has been shown to be or assist with:

Natural pain reliever

Natural anti-inflammatory

Homeostasis regulator

Neuroprotective at the cellular level

Pain and nervous system issues

Muscle recovery and muscle pain

Immune system support*

What are Glial and Mast Cells?Glial cells are various types of companion cells in the central and peripheral nervous system. Once thought to be nothing more than the glue that holds the brain together, these cells are now understood to have a much more complex role in the brain besides simply acting as a scaffold. Glial cells are responsible for nourishing neurons, facilitating nerve impulses, and exerting an inflammatory response on neurons.Dysregulation and over-activation of glial cells can have a detrimental effect on the nervous system[6,7,8].

Mast cells are a type of immune system cell that responds to chemical signals from tissue injury. When mast cells “degranulate,” they release a payload of inflammatory cytokines, NGF, histamines, and other molecules in the surrounding tissue. These chemicals attract white blood cells and activate their immune response against pathogens. Mast cells also activate nociceptors (pain receptors) with the chemicals they secrete. Overactive mast cell activation induces an increase in the density and sensitivity of pain receptors and can play a part in a variety of chronic pain issues.

How does it work?It was discovered that mammals have a specific receptor cell known as the endocannabinoid system, which is closely interconnected with the nervous and immune system. CBD has been shown to boost every function of our cannabinoid receptors to help soothe and relax us. PEA has an affinity for the cannabinoid-like G-coupled receptors, although it has no affinity for the classical cannabinoid receptors CB1 and CB2. This is why it is sometimes referred to as a non-psychoactive “indirect endocannabinoid.”

It does not block pain signals the way opioids and other analgestics do. Instead it works upstream by supporting the healthy function of glial cells and mast cells.*